United States History - Western, Plains & Rocky Mountain Region, Consumer Industries
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Overview
Napa Valley is the second biggest tourist attraction in California, after Disneyland. But 25 years ago the valley was virtually dormant, until a new wave of settlers determined to make great wines moved into the region. Conaway captures what may be the most crucial moment in wine-making history. Two 8-page photo inserts.The New York Times-bestselling history of the Napa wine valley, which Cyra McFadden of the Los Angeles Times Book Review said "resembles a sparkling wine. It's breezy, brassy and slips right down." James Conaway takes readers on an illuminating journey through California's premier wine country.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
Conaway ( The Kingdom in the Country ), here tells the history of Napa Valley wines and the development of wine-drinking in America. He relates the stories of those colorful individuals who settled in the California valley for its beauty and quiet, but were drawn by the favorable conditions into the competition to make a better wine. His other tales are of ``development'' itself, which has spoiled and polluted the area's natural beauty, and has pitted neighbor against neighbor in a political struggle to stop ``progress'' and prevent corporate takeovers of the wine industry. A tale of violence this is not, but a little creeps into some of the stories, mortals being less perfectible than wine. This lively history should have wide appeal. Photos. (Oct.)Library Journal
Less than 30 years ago, oak trees claimed more Napa Valley soil than grapevines. A few winemakers who had held on through Prohibition and some newcomers, deemed eccentric by most, had great faith in the potential preeminence of Napa wines. They planted grapes unknown to the Valley--Chardonnay, Cabernet--and within 25 years, Napa wines had come to rival those of France and Italy. Former Washington Post reporter Conaway ( The Kingdom in the Country, LJ 10/15/87) carefully profiles Napa's visionaries, telling their personal stories and revealing the unlikely sources of their inspiration, some of it the stuff of fevered historical romance fiction. He also documents the 1970s invasion of tourism and the big liquor companies. His book is readable and authoritative, if somewhat exhausting. Another history of Napa will not be needed for many years.-- Tim Zindel, Hastings Coll. of the Law, San FranciscoBooknews
The Napa Valley, virtually dormant 25 years ago, is now one of the premier wine-producing regions of the world. Journalist and wine-lover Conaway, as much interested in the valley's social and political life as its wines, tells the tale of the place, its people, and the struggle between preservation and development. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
April 1, 1992
Publisher
Quill Press
Pages
529
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780380715992